After Chargers tight end Randy McMichael talked trash about the Jets following their game Sunday, Ryan responded yesterday by quoting one of Ferrell’s most memorable lines from “Anchorman.”

“Stay classy, San Diego,” said Ryan with a smile, doing his best Ron Burgundy.

McMichael did not give the Jets credit after their 27-21 victory Sunday. He blamed the Chargers for taking their “foot off the gas” when they had an 11-point lead. He went on to rip the Jets’ defensive backs.

“Their secondary isn’t anything,” McMichael said. “It’s our fault. It had nothing to do with anyone on their team. The guys in this locker room, we lost the game.”

Those comments made their way to the Jets locker room, and several of the Jets defensive backs returned fire.

“McMichael, he was chattering during the game,” Darrelle Revis said. “He’s just a number. He’s number 81. We weren’t focused on him. We were focused on Antonio Gates, who is the better tight end.”

Then Revis acted as if he didn’t know the tight end’s name.

“Nobody is worried about McMichaels, whatever his name is,” Revis said. “McMichael, whatever. I don’t even know his name.”

But McMichael, a 10th-year pro who also played for the Dolphins and Rams, is not backing down.

“If I say it, I mean,” he told reporters in San Diego yesterday.

Antonio Cromartie, who played for the Chargers from 2006-09, ripped San Diego for blowing a 21-10 lead.

“When you’re up by 11 points in the fourth quarter [Chargers actually led by 11 in the third quarter] and you can’t even finish the game up, that shows what kind of team you are,” Cromartie said. “A team that can’t finish. That’s been San Diego the whole time.”

Cromartie said he thinks the Jets and Chargers could meet again in the playoffs.

“At the end of the day, we’ll end up probably seeing them, that’s if they can win their [division],” Cromartie said. “They have to get past the Raiders first.”

Ryan began his press conference yesterday by praising the job his secondary did holding the Chargers to 172 yards passing. The Chargers entered the game averaging 293.4 through the air.